Valerievk: One image was missing from the uploaded material (the image showing the brush folders). I haven't done anything about it yet. I could crop it from the image of the whole page, but if you have the image lying around anyway, perhaps you could upload it

Claus - you taught me something really cool right there... lock transperancy. I did not have a clue about that - so cheers.

I've been thinking allot about Krita tutorials lately and one thing that I've always liked are books and texts that come in different skill sets. My favorite for Photoshop for example was Creative Photoshop CS4 by Derek Lea. Where the writer assumes everyone knows the basics and then goes on to delve into details but surrounding one specific project. Like a classic tutorial: this is what I did, this is whats so specific about it (a way to do some specific style usually (like Low-brow art and posters, specific montages and so on)) and this is how to recreate it without going too much into the technical aspects but instead teaching you the techniques involved.

Kinda like "an artists guide".

Combined that with a "General guide" (that points out the specifics of Krita) a "Quick Tips Guide" (Which gives little pointers (like the "Lock Transperancy" thing) and how they can be used to speed up stuff) and everything should be covered.

@jensreuterberg: do you mean alpha locking? Lock transparency is pretty basic, I kind of doubt a Photoshop user doesn't know about transparency locking. I've also noticed recently that in other programs, alpha locking is called "clipping," though I don't know if they work the same way as in Krita.

Anyway, I did plan to make step-by-step tutorials, but only once I've finished covering the basics, otherwise it'd be too confusing because of the lack of documentation. It's not a too-high high priority for me either because while such tutorials are part interface tutorials, they're also more drawing tutorials, and there are Much better artists using Krita than me for those (like Deevad, and Anitim has such tutorials on Youtube).

I did upload a small demo pic recently on my DA account: http://white-heron.deviantart.com/#/d5kn48gIt demonstrates some of the stuff covered in my tutorials, so it basically does the opposite of what you're asking: instead of a step-by-step with tips along the way, it's a finished picture pointing to tutorials on basics.

Heeey... I used Photoshop for years its just that I simply went for a ctrl+click on the layer thumbnail to select it instead. In Krita i used the "Select opaque" to the same effekt - but alphalocking was brilliant.

@jensreuterberg: So the tutorial magic is working already - cool. But I don't want to take credit from the author of these great tutorials: valerievk is the real teacher here; I'm just feeding the stuff into UserBase.

That was fast! Weird, all the images seem to be there. Ah! There's a text section just before that got repeated twice ("Some options include: Scale" etc.), so the images numbers were displaced after that. I probably copy/pasted the same text twice by mistake. Because of that it looks as though an image is missing. Whoops?

jensreuterberg, just to clear up any confusion, for me "transparency locking" is just when you lock a layer's transparency value (so you can only draw on area with things already on them). Alpha-locking is when you constrain the visible areas to whatever areas are visible below (to easily add texturing layers and such). Though, come to think of it, that's just how I differentiate the features, I never checked the official terms...

@valerievk: well either way I had no idea about them. So brilliant, cheers and all. When I get some more time later this month I've been thinking of testing features in Krita and write them down (to assist, if possible, with the tutorial) - if only there where more hours in the day

Excellent, Excellent tutorials!!!! Much appreciation for the hard work. Krita needs better exposure and this stuff I'm sure will help a lot of people. Still waiting on the windows version that will bring me home If or when never ending canvas gets added (like mypaint) and a bit more windows friendliness it'll be over for me haha.

Infinite canvas mode was one of the successful projects of Google Summer of Code. It may take some time to integrate, but it's definitely planned.

Just out of curiosity, what are the main issues you have on Windows that you think are preventing you from using Krita productively? It also helps the developers to know these things. There are some known issues with windows resizing, for example, but for me that hasn't been a problem for drawing. As a mouse user, the fact that the "speed" input isn't as smooth as on Linux is a bigger problem because I use it to emulate tablet effects ( https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=309619 ) . Some tablet users complain that strokes leave a dot at the beginning because the tablet is sending both a mouse signal and a tablet signal. This is a known bug being worked on I think.

Personally, I was still able to complete drawings with Krita on Windows though. What are the main issues you are having problems with?

I am finally, finally done with the Color Smudge Brush tutorial. I decided to tackle it right after the Pixel Brush tutorial because it is possibly the most complicated brush in Krita, and indeed, figuring out how it works was... rather hard. I'm glad I did start with the hard brush though, the rest should be easy in comparison, whee!http://white-heron.deviantart.com/#/d5p06cn